Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX, U.P. AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAKHTAWAR LAL KAILASH CHAND ARETI AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/08/1992
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
RAMASWAMI, V. (J) II
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1952 1992 SCR (3) 733
1992 SCC (3) 750 JT 1992 (4) 388
1992 SCALE (2)138
ACT:
U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948/U.P. Sales Tax Rules, 1948:
Sections 2(e) and 3-D Purchase Tax-Levy of-Commission
agent/Dealer purchasing goods on behalf of ex-state
principals and despatching them to places outside State-
Whether an inter-State purchase-Whether liable to pay
purchase Tax under the State Act.
Section 3-B, Form III-C-1:
Purchase Tax-recovery of-Dealer wrongly issuing
Declaration form for inter-State transaction as intra-State
purchase-Whether can be proceeded against for tax leviable
under Central Sales Tax Act-Provision applicable only to tax
leviable under State Act evaded.
Central Sales Tax Act 1956:
Section 3(c)-Purchase of goods by dealer on behalf of
ex-State principals and despatch to places outside State-
Whether an inter-State purchase.
HEADNOTE:
The common question for consideration in the batch of
appeals filed by the appellant-State was whether the goods
purchased by a commission agent for and on behalf of the
principals outside the State of U.P. and dispatched to
principals, were inter-State purchases under clause (a) of
Section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 and were,
therefore, not exigible to tax under Section 3-D of the U.P.
Sales Tax Act, 1948.
The respondent-assessee, in one of the appeals, a
registered dealer in Uttar Pradesh, dealing in foodgrains
and oils among others, purchased the commodities from
Cartmen and agriculturists, both on his own account as well
as for and on behalf of his ex-U.P. principals, i.e.,
dealers located outside the State, and claimed that inasmuch
as the goods pur-
735
chased for and on behalf of the ex-State principals were
sent to them forthwith, the said purchases squarely fell
under clause (a) of section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act
and were not exigible to tax under the State Act. However,
the the case of the State was that the purchases in question
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were to be treated as intra-State purchases, exigible to
purchase tax under Section 3-D of the U.P. Sales Tax Act,
1948 and, therefore, tax thereon was payable by the selling
dealer.
The High Court held that the purchases made by the
commission agents in the appellant-State on behalf of the
principals outside the State, where the goods so purchased
were despatched to such principals, were inter-State
purchases not exigible to tax under the U.P. Sales Tax Act,
1948. It found that the purchase orders placed by the ex-
State principals to the assessee were not on the record
but, from the conduct of the parties and on the facts, it
was clear that the ex-State principals contracted with the
assessee that he should purchase goods on their behalf in
the State and despatch them to ex-State destinations on the
payment of commission and the goods were sent to the ex-
State principals in fulfillment of the contract.
In the appeals before this Court, on behalf of the
State it was contended that the purchases made by the
respondent-dealer in the State were completed purchases
once a purchase was complete in the State it was immaterial
whether the goods were later despatched to another State or
sold within the State; for the purpose of the U.P. Sales Tax
Act, it was enough that a sale or purchase took place within
the State; the subsequent movement of the goods was
irrelevant; a concluded sale must necessarily take place in
the other State and not in the State from which the goods
emanated and a concluded or a completed sale must follow the
movement of goods and should not precede and if a purchase
or sale was complete in the State from which the goods
emanated, it could never be an inter-State purchase or sale.
In one of the connected appeals the question was
whether the respondent-dealer who had issued Forms III-C-I
and paid tax on the purchases made by him under the U.P.
Sales Tax Act, but subsequently, relying on the High Court’s
decision under appeal, claimed and got, refund of the tax
paid by him, on the ground that the purchases effected by
him were not assessable to tax under the U.P. Sales Tax Act,
could be
736
proceeded against under Section 3-B of the U.P. Sales Tax
Act, for making good the tax amount for issuing wrong or
false certificates or declaration and thus preventing the
authorities from taxing the transaction under the Central
Act.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: 1. The purchases effected by the respondent-dealer
were inter-State purchases. The purchases were made by the
respondent as a commission agent on behalf of the ex-State
principals and the goods purchases under each of the
purchases were duly despatched to such principals, and such
despatch took place not later than three days from the date
of purchase, as soon as the railway wagon was available.
The purchase of goods and their despatch to ex-State
principal were parts of the same transaction. The movement
of goods from the appellant-State to another State was
occasioned by and was the result-or the incident of-the
purchase. It was the consequence of the purchase. Such
movement of goods, though not proved to have been expressly
stated in the contract of sale, was yet held to have been
agreed upon between the parties. The question whether a
sale/purchase is an inter-State sale/purchase depends on the
facts of each case. The principles are well settled; it is
only a question of application of these principles to the
facts in each case. If the respondent-dealer had purchased
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the goods on behalf of the ex-State principals in the first
instance and thereafter in pursuance of subsequent
instructions despatched the goods, then the instructions to
despatch the goods are independent of the instructions to
purchase. There is a break between the purchase and
despatch of goods. It would not be an inter-State purchase.
An out-State principal may first instruct his commission
agent within the appellant-State to purchase the goods on
his behalf and to await his further instructions. Depending
upon the market conditions and other circumstances, the ex-
State principal may instruct his agent in the State either
to sell the goods within the State or to despatch the goods
beyond the State. If such were the case, it would be right
to say that the appellant-State was competent to tax the
purchase by the respondent-dealer. But that is not the case
in the instant case. [743B-C,746F-G]
2.1 Where a sale or purchase, though effected within
the State of U.P. occasions the movement of goods
sold/purchased thereunder from the State of U.P. to other
State, it becomes an inter-State sale. Such a sale
737
cannot be taxed by the Legislature of Uttar Pradesh. It is
taxable only under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. [746D]
2.2 According to clause (a) of Section 3 of the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956, an inter-State sale or purchase is one
which occasions the movement of goods from one State to
another. In other words, the movement of goods from one
State to another must be the necessary incident - the
necessary consequence-of sale or purchase. A case of cause
and effect - the cause being the sale/purchase and the
effect being the movement of the goods to another State.
[740F-G]
2.3 It is immaterial whether a completed sale precedes
the movement of goods or follows the movement of goods, or
for that matter, takes place while the goods are in transit.
What is important is that the movement of goods and the sale
must be inseparably connected. If the goods move from one
State to another in pursuance of an agreement of sale and
the sale is completed in the other State, it is an inter-
State sale. Indeed, from the language employed in clause
(a) of Section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 it is
clear that the movement of goods follows upon and is the
necessary consequence of the sale or purchase, as the case
may be, and not the other way round. [746A-C]
Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd., Bombay v. S.R. Sarkar and
Ors., [1961] 1 S.C.R. 379; Union of India & Anr. v.K.G.
Khosla & Co. (P) Ltd. & Ors., [1979] 3 S.C.R. 453; Oil India
Co. Ltd. v, Superintendent of the Taxes and Ors., [1975] 3
S.C.R. 797 and Balabhagas Hulaschand v. State of Orissa,
[1976] 2 S.C.R. 939, relied on.
A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor & Co. v. State of Madras, [1964]
8 S.C.R. 217 and State of Travancore Cochin v. Shanmugha
Vilas Cashew Nut Factory, [1954] S.C.R. 53, referred to.
3. Even assuming that the respondent-dealer represented
to the authorities by issuing Form III-C-I that the
purchases effected by him were intra-State purchase liable
to be taxed under the State enactment and thereby prevented
the authorities from taxing the transactions under the
Central Sales Tax Act, the respondent-dealer cannot be
proceeded against under Section 3-B of the U.P. Sales Tax
Act for the reason that the said Section applies to a
situation where the tax "leviable under this Act" i.e.,
State Act, is evaded. It does not apply where the tax
payable under the
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Central Government is evaded. [747D-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 4560-
62 of 1990 etc. etc.
From the Judgment and Order dated 8.10.1984 of the
Allahabad High Court in Sales Tax Revision Nos. 446,447 and
448 of 1983.
D.V. Sehgal, B.S. Chauhan, R.B. Misra and Vishwajit
Singh for the Appellants.
Raja Ram Agrawal, R.D.U. Upadhyay, P.K. Chakraborty,
Vijay Hansaria, Suresh Gupta, Puneet Tyagi, Mrs. Santosh
Singh, P.S. Jha, Dr. Maya Rao, Ms. Abha Jain, Mrs Rani
Chhabra, M.P. Shorawala, R.C. Verma and Sarva Mitter for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J. A common question arises in this
batch of Appeals and Special Leave Petitions.
Leave granted in S.L.Ps.
In Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P.v. Hanuman Trading Co.
[1979) Vol. 43 Sales Tax Cases 408] a learned Single Judge
of the Allahabad High Court held that the purchases made by
Commission Agents in U.P. on behalf of the principals
outside the State, where the goods so purchased were
despatched to such principals, were inter-state purchases
not exigible to tax under the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948.
This decision was rendered on October 6,1978. Civil Appeal
No. 1809 of 1982 is preferred against the same. Following
the said decision a large number of cases were disposed of
by the Allahabad High Court which have given rise to the
other Civil Appeals and the S.L.Ps. posted before us. Since
the facts in all these appeals are stated to be identical,
it is enough to refer to the facts in Civil Appeal No. 1809
of 1982. The facts as found recorded in the order of the
High Court are to the following effect:
The respondent-assessee, Hanuman Trading Company, is a
registered dealer in Uttar Pradesh, dealing in foodgrains
and oils among others. During the year in question, he
purchased the said commodities both on his own account as
well as for and on behalf of his ex-U.P.
739
principals i.e. dealers located outside the State of U.P.
We are not concerned with the purchases made by the
respondent-dealer on his own account, but only with the
purchases made by him as the commission agent of the ex-U.P.
principals. These purchases were made by the respondent-
dealer from three sources, namely: (1) from Registered
Dealers (2) from Cartmen, and (3) from Agriculturists. So
for as purchases made from registered dealers are concerned,
we are not concerned with them. The learned counsel for the
State of U.P., stated before us that tax thereon is payable
by the selling dealer. The controversy thus narrows down to
purchases made by the respondent-dealer from cartmen and
agriculturists. The finding of the High Court with respect
to the nature of the transactions may be set out in their
own words:
"In the present cases, the purchase orders placed
by the ex-U.P. principals to the assessee are not
on the record but, from the conduct of the parties
and on the facts found, it is clear that the ex-
U.P. Principals contracted with the assessee that
he should purchase goods on their behalf in U. P.
and despatch them to ex-U.P. destinations on the
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payment of commission...........the goods were sent
to the ex-U.P. principals in fulfillment of the
contract."
Sales of agricultural produce by agriculturists are
exempt from tax under the U.P. Sales Tax Act by virtue of
the proviso to the definition of the expression ’dealer" in
clause (e) of Section 2. The proviso says that "a person who
sells agricultural or horticultural produce grown by himself
or grown on any land in which he has an interest, whether as
an owner,usufructuary mortgagee, tenant or otherwise, or who
sells poultry or dairy products from fowls or animals kept
by him shall not, in respect of such goods be treated as a
dealer." In such a case, it is stated, purchase tax is
leviable on the purchaser. If, however, the purchase is an
inter-state purchase as defined by Section 3 of the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956 then the State Legislature becomes
disabled from taxing it by virtue of Article 286(1) of the
Constitution of India. It is this aspect which lies at the
root of the grievance of the State, and it is precisely for
this reason that it seeks to treat the purchases in question
as intra-state purchases, exigible to purchase-tax under
Section 3-D of the State Act.
740
Section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 defines
the inter-State sale/purchase. Omitting the Explanations
which are not, necessary for our purpose, the Section reads
as follows:
"3. When is a sale or purchase of goods said to
take place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce.- A sale or purchase of goods shall be
deemed to take place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce if the sale or purchase -
(a) occasions the movement of goods from one State
to another; or
(b) is effected by a transfer of documents of title
to the goods during their movement from one State
to another.
Section 4 specifies when can a sale or purchase of
goods be said to have taken place inside a State; once a
sale or purchase is determined in accordance with the said
provision to have taken place inside a particular State, it
must be deemed that it has not taken place in any other
State. Section 6 is the charging Section. Coming back to
the definition in Section 3, an inter-State sale or purchase
is deemed to take place if "the sale or purchase occasions
the movement of the goods from one State to another" or
where "the sale or purchase is effected by a transfer of
documents of title to the goods during their movement from
one State to another." The respondent-dealer says that
inasmuch as the goods purchased for and on behalf of the ex-
State principals were sent to them forthwith, the said
purchases squarely fall under clause (a) of Section 3
According to clause (a) of Section 3, an inter-State
sale or purchase is one which occasions the movement of
goods from one State to another. In other words, the
movement of goods from one State to another must be the
necessary incident - the necessary consequence - of sale or
purchase. A case of cause and effect - the cause being the
sale/purchase and the effect being the movement of the
goods to another State. The purport of this clause has been
succintly stated by Shah, J. In Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd.
Bombay v S.R. Sarkar and Ors., [1961] 1 S.C.R. 379, a
decision of the Constitution Bench:
"In our view, therefore, within Cl.(b) of S.3 are
included sales in which property in the goods
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passes during the movement of
741
the goods from one State to another by transfer of
documents of title thereto: cl.(a) of s.3 covers
sales, other than those included in Cl.(b) in which
the movement of goods from one State to another is
the result of a covenant or incident of the
contract of sale, and property in the goods passes
in either State."
To the same effect is the decision in Union of India
and Anr. v.K.G. Khosla & Co. (P) Ltd. & Ors., [1979] 3
S.C.R. 453. Chandrachud, CJ., speaking on behalf of
himself, D.A. Desai and R.S. Pathak, JJ. ruled:
"It is not true to say that for the purposes of
section 3(a) of the Act it is necessary that the
contract of sale must itself provide for and cause
the movement of goods or that the movement of goods
must be occasioned specifically in accordance with
the terms of the contract of sale, The true
position in law is as stated in Tata Iron and Steel
Co. Ltd., Bombay v.S.R. Sarkar and others (1)
wherein Shah, J. speaking for the majority observed
that clauses (a) and (b) of section 3 of the Act
are mutually exclusive and that section 3(a) covers
sales in which the movement of goods from one State
to another "is the result of a covenant or incident
of the contract of sale, and property in the goods
passes in either State." Sarkar, J. speaking for
himself and on behalf of Das Gupta, J. agreed with
the majority that clauses (a) and (b) of section 3
are mutually exclusive but differed from it and
held that "a sale can occasion the movement of the
goods sold only when the terms of the sale provide
that the goods would be moved; in other words, a
sale occasions a movement of goods when the
contract of sale so provides". The view of the
majority was approved by this court in the Central
Marketing Co. of India v. State of Mysore, (1)
State Trading Corporation of india v. State of
Mysore (2) and Singareni Collieries Co. v.
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Hyderabad. (3) In
K.G. Kholsa & Co. v. Deputy Commission of
Commercial Taxes, (4) counsel for the Revenue
invited the court to reconsider the question but
the court declined to do so. In a recent decision
of this court in Oil India Ltd. v. The
Superintendent of Taxes and Others (5) it was
observed by Mathew, J., who spoke for the court,
that: (1) a sale which
742
occasions movement of goods from one State to
another is a sale in the course of inter-State
trade, no matter in which State the property in the
goods passes; (2) it is not necessary that the sale
must precede the inter-State movement in order that
the sale may be deemed to have occasioned such
movement, and (3) it is also not necessary for a
sale to be deemed to have taken place in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce, that the
covenant regarding inter-State Movement must be
specified in the contract itself. It would be
enough if the movement was in pursuance of and
incidental to the contract of sale. The learned
Judge added that it was held in a number of cases
by the Supreme Court that if the movement of goods
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from one State to another is the result of a
covenant or an incident of the contract of sale,
then the sale is an inter-State sale."
The decision in Kholsa and Co. explains that to be
called an inter-State sale or purchase, it is not necessary
that the contract of sale must expressly provide for and/or
stipulate the movement of goods from one State to the other;
it is enough if such movement of goods is implicit in the
contract of sale. If, however, the movement of goods is
neither expressly provided for in the contract nor is it
implicit in it, the movement of goods from one State to
another, - even if one takes place - cannot be related to
the sale/purchase. In such a case the movement of goods
would be un-connected with an independent of the
sale/purchase. It would not fall under Section 3(a). To
fall thereunder, the sale and the movement of the goods must
be parts of the same transaction.
In the decision in A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor and Company
v. State of Madras, [1964] 8 S.C.R. 217 the following
statement occurs: "The mere fact that the article sold in
the State had been brought from outside the State does not
make the sale of that article a sale in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce. It is only when A, in State
X, purchased through a commission agent in a State Y and
receives the articles purchased through the commercial
agency that the sale comes within the expression ‘in the
course of inter-State trade’: See State of Travancore Cochin
v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut Factory." This statement is
in accord with the ratio of the decisions aforementioned.
743
If we examine the facts of this case in the light of
the above principles, it would be clear that the purchases
effected by the respondent-dealer were inter-State
purchases. The purchases were made by the respondent as a
commission agent on behalf of the ex-U.P. principals and the
goods purchased under each of the purchases were duly
despatched to such principals It is found that such
despatched took place not later than three days from the
date of purchase, as soon as the railway wagon was
available. The purchase of goods and their despatch to ex-
State principal were parts of the same transaction. The
movement of goods from Uttar Pradesh to another State was
occasioned by and was the result - or the incident of - the
purchase. It was the consequence of the purchase. Such
movement of goods, though not proved to have been expressly
stated in the contract of sale, was yet held to have been
agreed upon between the parties. We must emphasise that the
question whether a sale/purchase is an inter-State
sale/purchase depends on the facts of each case. The
principles are well settled; it is only a question of
application of these principles to the facts found in each
case.
Sri Sehgal, learned counsel for the State of Uttar
Pradesh contended that the purchases made by the respondent-
dealer in the State of U.P. were completed purchases. Once
a purchase is complete in the State of Uttar Pradesh, he
contends, it is immaterial whether the goods are later
despatched to another State or sold within the State. For
the purpose of the U.P. Sales Tax Act, it is enough that a
sale or purchase takes place within the State; the
subsequent movement of the goods is irrelevant, says the
counsel. We find it not possible to agree. As held by
Mathew, J. in Oil India Co. Ltd. v. Superintendent of the
Taxes and Ors., [1975] 3 S.C.R. 797, quoted approvingly in
Khosla and Co., "a sale which occasions the movement of
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goods from one State to another is a sale in the course of
the inter-State trade, no matter in which State the property
in the goods passes. "Even if the goods move in pursuance
of an agreement of sale and the sale is completed in the
State in which the goods are received, it will be an inter-
State sale, as explained by this Court in Balabhagas
Hulaschand v. State of Orissa, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 939.
Sri Sehgal placed strong reliance upon certain
observations in Balabhagas v. State of Orissa. The question
that arose for consideration in that case was whether the
definition of "sale" in Section 2(g) of the Central Sales
Tax Act takes in an agreement of sale. Fazal Ali, J;
speaking for the Bench comprising Mathew, J. and himself,
held that it does. Having said so, the
744
learned Judge made certain further observations which read
as follows:
"Furthermore, we can hardly conceive of any case
where a sale would take place before the movement
of goods. Normally what happens is that there is a
contract between the two parties in pursuance of
which the goods move and when they are accepted and
the price is paid the sale takes place. There
would, therefore, hardly be any case where a sale
would take place even before the movement of the
goods. We would illustrate our point of view by
giving some concrete instances:
Case No.1 - A is a dealer in goods in State X
and enters into an agreement to sell his goods to B
in State X. In pursuance of the agreement A sends
the goods from State X to State Y by booking the
goods in the name of B. In such a case it is
obvious that the sale is preceded by the movement
of goods being in pursuance of a contract which
eventually merges into a sale the movement must be
deemed to be occasioned by the sale. The present
case clearly falls within this category.
Case No. II - A who is a dealer in State X
agrees to sell goods to B but he books the goods
from State X to State Y in his own name and his
agent in State Y receives the goods on behalf of A.
Thereafter the goods are delivered to B in State Y
and if B accepts them a sale takes place. It will
be seen that in this case the movement of goods is
neither in pursuance of the agreement to sell nor
in the movement occasioned by the sale. The seller
himself takes the goods to State Y and sells the
goods there. This is, therefore, purely an internal
sale which takes place in State Y and falls beyond
the purview of Section 3(a) of the Central Sales
Tax Act not being an inter-State sale.
Case No. III - B a purchaser in State Y comes
to State X and purchases the goods and pays the
price thereof. After having purchased the goods
he then books the goods from State X to State Y in
his own name. This is also a case where the sale
is purely an internal sale having taken place in
State X and the movement of goods is not occasioned
by the sale but takes place after the property is
purchased by B and becomes his property.
745
Generally these are only type of cases that can
occur in the day to day commercial transactions.
It is, therefore, manifest that there can hardly be
a case where once a sale takes place the movement
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is subsequent to the sale."
The Learned Judge proceeded further and held thus:
"(2) That are following conditions must be
satisfied before a sale can be said to take place
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce:
(i) that there is an agreement to sell which
contains a stipulation express or implied regarding
the movement of the goods from one State to
another;
(ii) that in pursuance of the said contract the
goods in fact move from one State to another; and
(iii) that ultimately a concluded sale takes place
in the State where the goods are sent which must be
different from the State from which the goods move.
If these conditions are satisfied then by virtue of
Section 9 of the Central Sales Tax Act it is the
State from which the goods move which will be
competent to levy the tax under the provisions of
the Central Sales Tax Act. This proposition is
not, and cannot, be disputed by the learned counsel
for the parties."
Sri Sehgal relies particularly upon "Case No. III"
contained in the first extract and clause (iii) mentioned in
the second extract. Relying upon these statements, the
learned counsel contends that a concluded sale must
necessarily take place in the other State and not in the
State from which the goods emanate. According to him, a
concluded or a completed sale must follow the movement of
goods and should not precede. If a purchase or sale is
complete in the State from which the goods emanate, he says,
it can never be an inter-State purchase or sale. We cannot
accede to this understanding of the learned counsel. The
said observations, no doubt rather widely worded, must be
understood in the context of the question that arose for
consideration in that case viz., whether an agreement of
sale is included within the definition of ‘sale’ as defined
in the Central Sales Tax Act. Be that as it may, the true
position has since been explained in the
746
later decision in Khosla and Co. It is immaterial whether a
completed sale precedes the movement of goods or follows the
movement of goods, or for that matter, takes place while the
goods are in transit. What is important is that the
movement of goods and the sale must be inseparably
connected. The ratio of Balabhagas is this: if the goods
move from one State to another in pursuance of an agreement
of sale and the sale is completed in the other State, it is
an inter-State sale. The observations relied upon by Sri
Sehgal do not constitute the ratio of the decision and
cannot come to the rescue of appellant-State. Indeed, if
one looks to the language employed in clause (a) of Section
3 it seems to suggest that the movement of goods follows
upon and is the necessary consequence of the sale or
purchase, as case may be, and not the other way round.
Sri Sehgal is equally not right in saying that movement
of goods from the State of U.P. to other State(s) is
immaterial and that the U.P. Legislature is competent to tax
each and every purchase that takes place within that State.
Ordinarily, it is so, but where a sale or purchase, though
effected within the State of U.P. occasions the movement of
goods sold/purchased thereunder from the State of U.P. to
other State, it becomes an inter-State sale. Such a sale
cannot be taxed by the Legislature of Uttar Pradesh. It is
taxable only under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956.
Situation could have been different if the respondent-
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dealer had purchased the goods on behalf of the ex-U.P.
principals in the first instance and thereafter in pursuance
of subsequent instructions despatched the goods. In such an
event the instructions to despatch the goods are independent
of the instructions to purchase. There is a break between
the purchase and despatch of goods. It would not be an
inter-State purchase. An out-State principal may first
instruct his commission agent within the State of U.P. to
purchase the goods on his behalf and to await his further
instructions. Depending upon the market conditions and
other circumstances, the ex-State principal may instruct his
agent in the State either to sell the goods within the State
or to despatch the goods beyond the State. If such were the
case, Sri Sehgal would have been right in saying that the
State of U.P. was competent to tax the purchase by the
respondent-dealer. But that is not the case here on the
facts found by the appropriate authorities.
For the above reasons, the Civil appeals fail and are
dismissed, but in the circumstances without costs.
747
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1534 OF 1990.
A Further question arises in this appeal. The
respondent-dealer, who is situated similarly to the
respondent-dealer in Civil Appeal No. 1809 of 1982, issued
Forms III-C-I and paid tax on the purchases made by him
under the U.P. Sales Tax Act. However, after the decision
of the Allahabad High Court in Human Trading Company, he
claimed refund of the tax paid by him and probably got it,
contending that the purchases effected by him were not
assessable to tax under the U.P. Sales Tax Act. He was then
proceeded against under Section 3-B of the U.P. Sales Tax
Act which provides that if a person issues a false or wrong
certificate or declaration prescribed under the provisions
of the said Act and the rules thereunder to another person
by reason of which "a tax leviable under this Act" on the
transaction is not collected (or collected at a lesser
rate), then the person issuing such wrong or false
certificate/declaration becomes himself liable to pay such
tax. The case of the authorities was that the respondent-
dealer represented to the authorities by issuing Form III-C-
I that the purchases effected by him are intra-State
purchases liable to be taxed under the State enactment and
thereby prevented the authorities from taxing the
transactions under the Central Sales Tax Act; he must,
therefore, make good that tax amount. Assuming that what
the authorities say is true, even so the respondent-dealer
cannot be proceeded against under Section 3-B for the reason
that the said Section applies to a situation where the tax
"leviable under this Act" i.e., State Act, is evaded. It
does not apply where the tax payable under the Central
enactment is evaded. This appeal has to be dismissed on
this short ground alone, and is accordingly dismissed.
No costs.
N.P.V. Appeals dismissed.
748